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A Hop From South America Tracking Australian Marsupials

Today's Australian marsupials appear to have branched off from a South American ancestor to form all currently known marsupials-kangaroos, the rodent-like bandicoots, and the Tasmanian devil.
by Staff Writers
Munster, Germany (SPX) Jul 30, 2010
Debates have raged for decades about how to arrange the Australian and South American branches of the marsupial family tree.

While marsupials like the Australian tammar wallaby and the South American opossum seem to be quite different, research by Maria Nilsson and colleagues at the University of Munster, soon to be published in the online open access journal PLoS Biology, shows otherwise.

Using sequences of a kind of "jumping gene," the team has reconstructed the marsupial family to reveal that all living Australian marsupials have one ancient origin in South America. This required a simple migration scenario whereby theoretically only one group of ancestral South American marsupials migrated across Antarctica to Australia.

Previous studies theorize that marsupials originated in Australia and that some lineages might have been split when the landmasses separated 80 million years ago.

There are few ancient marsupial fossils found in South America or Australia, and previous genetic studies based on nuclear and mitochondrial genes have revealed contradictory results about which lineages are most closely related and which split off first.

Nilsson, Jurgen Schmitz, and colleagues screened the genomes of the South American opossum and the Australian tammar wallaby, as well as the DNA of 20 other marsupial species, including the wallaroo, the common wombat, and the marsupial mole for retroposons.

Retroposons are unlikely to independently arise in both these species in exactly the same part of the genome by chance and can be used as unambiguous phylogenetic markers. Thus, the overwhelming likelihood is that retroposons shared between species are derived from a long-lost ancestor.

Today's Australian marsupials appear to have branched off from a South American ancestor to form all currently known marsupials-kangaroos, the rodent-like bandicoots, and the Tasmanian devil.

It is still a mystery how the two distinct Australian and South American branches of marsupials separated so cleanly, but perhaps future studies can shed light on how this occurred.



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World's 103 wild mountain antelopes face extinction: Kenya
Nairobi (AFP) July 29, 2010
Wildlife officials in Kenya warned Thursday that an antelope species, whose entire global wild population of 103 exists only in the east African country, was on the verge of extinction. Habitat loss, genetic factors, predation and disease were threatening to wipe out the mountain bongo (Tragelaphus eurycerus isaaci), the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) said in a statement. The elusive mount ... read more







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